Compartilhar via


XAsyncBlock

Represents the lifetime of an asynchronous call.

Syntax

typedef struct XAsyncBlock {  
    XTaskQueueHandle queue;  
    void* context;  
    XAsyncCompletionRoutine* callback;  
    unsigned internal[sizeof ( void* ) * 4];  
} XAsyncBlock  

Members

queue
Type: XTaskQueueHandle

Optional. The handle to the task queue for the asynchronous call and, optionally, the completion callback specified in callback. If set to null, the asynchronous call attempts to use the process task queue. If the process task queue is also set to null, then the asynchronous call fails and returns E_NO_TASK_QUEUE.

context
Type: void*

Optional. A pointer to information passed to the completion callback.

callback
Type: XAsyncCompletionRoutine*

Optional callback that will be invoked when the call completes.

internal
Type: unsigned char[sizeof(void*) * 4]

Reserved for internal use.

Remarks

The XAsyncBlock structure represents the lifetime of an asynchronous call. You use XAsyncBlock to first invoke an asynchronous call and provide an optional completion callback for that call. After that, you can use the XAsyncBlock as a handle for that particular call's invocation. When you invoke an asynchronous call, it's submitted to a task queue for execution. A task queue allows you to determine which thread executes the asynchronous call and which thread invokes the completion callback, if one is specified. You don't have to create a task queue to call asynchronous calls. If a task queue isn't specified in queue, the process task queue is used by default. Typically, the process task queue dispatches asynchronous calls to the system thread pool and completion callbacks are invoked on the thread that initiated the asynchronous call when that thread is alertable. For more information about dispatch modes for task queues, see Async Task Queue Design.

Note

After invoking an asynchronous call, do not modify any of the parameters in the XAsyncBlock for that asynchronous call.

Completion Callbacks

You can optionally specify a pointer to a callback function in callback to provide a completion callback for an asynchronous call. A completion callback is a callback function that executes after the completion of an asynchronous call. You can provide context-specific data to the completion callback by specifying a pointer in context that represents information for the completion callback.

If you don't specify a completion callback in callback, you can periodically check if the asynchronous call is completed by using the XAsyncGetStatus function, and then use XAsyncGetResult and XAsyncGetResultSize as needed to get the results from the completed task.

For more information about completion callbacks, see XAsyncCompletionRoutine.

Implementing XAsyncBlock

You can use XAsyncProvider to implement your own asynchronous functionality using XAsyncBlock, and then invoke that functionality by using XTaskQueue functions. You can also call asynchronous calls by invoking XAsyncRun, a helper function that internally uses XAsyncProvider to run and track the callback function specified by XAsyncWork, another helper function. For more information about implementing your own asynchronous functionality using XAsyncProvider and XAsyncBlock, see Asynchronous Programming Model.

An XAsyncBlock must remain in memory for the lifetime of an asynchronous call. However, if the XAsyncBlock is dynamically allocated, it can be safely deleted within the completion callback for an asynchronous call.

Requirements

Header: XAsync.h

Supported platforms: Windows, Xbox One family consoles and Xbox Series consoles

See also

XAsync Members
XAsyncProvider Members
Asynchronous Programming Model